Articles/Essays – Volume 21, No. 3
Navel
I drive by a red farmhouse
in the setting sun. Orange morning
darts through rippled glass.
High-glossed linoleum
wears into mottled color. Oranges
studded with cloves perfume buffet drawers.
I imagine Gram’s baptism
in the irrigation ditch
way out back,
follow the road that turns
like a cord until the white church
appears.
There old men utter oracles
about the Holy Ghost,
about the body and blood
of sacrament
and how Gawwd rules
in our lives.
I remember the navel oranges
at Christmas time,
how I turned each one before eating
to the depression like a navel
on the underside and imagined
the undeveloped fruit.
The road threads from the church
to the blue school
that seemed an orphanage.
Oddly, here I learned to pray
against the taunts and whims of peers,
against the measuring, falling short,
against devils
and souls in hell
that could be prayed out,
souls severed from wholeness,
left waiting
for a chance connection.
Just as the sun sets, I pass by
the road, a spindle I revolve on.
I roll the window,
reach outside the car,
lay my palm
against the sun’s ghost.